Texans generally had no problem with Richards’ habits or friendships with the likes of Lily Tomlin and Willie Nelson, though one particularly ugly Republican smear campaign accused her of bisexuality-and that was before Karl Rove got into the game. “She had a vodka problem, she didn’t have a drug problem”). The road was rocky, complicated by Richards’ drinking and drug use-a little marijuana here, a few prescription pills there (“But Ann was an alcoholic,” said one intimate. Reid ( Comanche Sundown, 2010, etc.), a former Richards staffer, does a solid and evenhanded, if surely partisan job of recounting Richards’ rise from a politically interested but unconnected, thoroughly liberal homemaker to chief executive of one of the nation’s most important states. At the 1988 Democratic National Convention, she famously said of Bush’s gaffes, “He can’t help it-he was born with a silver foot in his mouth.” Bush senior laughed it off, but Bush junior swore vengeance, unseating her as governor and effectively retiring her politically. Readers who recall when Texas was Democratic will certainly remember Ann Richards (1933–2006), the tough-talking, motorcycle-riding governor who drove the Bush family to distraction. A lucid biography of the Texas politician who briefly mounted the national stage, only to be swept aside by the events of two decades past.
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